Understanding the origin of the [OI] low-velocity component from T Tauri stars
Elisabetta Rigliaco, Ilaria Pascucci, Uma Gorti, Suzan Edwards, David, Hollenbach

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of the low-velocity component of [OI] emission in T Tauri stars, revealing its association with FUV-driven photodissociation and identifying two distinct gas components in the disk environment.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the physical origin of the [OI] low-velocity component, distinguishing between disk surface emission and molecular wind contributions.
Findings
[OI] LVC correlates with accretion and FUV luminosity.
The [OI] LVC is likely produced by FUV photodissociation of OH.
Two components identified: a broad Keplerian disk surface and a narrow molecular wind.
Abstract
The formation time, masses, and location of planets are strongly impacted by the physical mechanisms that disperse protoplanetary disks and the timescale over which protoplanetary material is cleared out. Accretion of matter onto the central star, protostellar winds/jets, magnetic disk winds, and photoevaporative winds operate concurrently. Hence, disentangling their relative contribution to disk dispersal requires identifying diagnostics that trace different star-disk environments. Here, we analyze the low velocity component (LVC) of the Oxygen optical forbidden lines, which is found to be blueshifted by a few km/s with respect to the stellar velocity. We find that the [OI] LVC profiles are different from those of [NeII] at 12.81\mu m and CO at 4.7\mu m lines pointing to different origins for these gas lines. We report a correlation between the luminosity of the [OI] LVC and the…
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